Causal Agent:
Fungi (Sclerotium rolfsii)
Characteristic Symptoms: | |
The most common symptom is the brown to black rot or sunken tissues of the stem near the soil line, which often lead to wilting and death of the plant. | |
Under moist conditions, mass of white thread-like mycelia develop on the lesion often girdling the stem base and mustard-size light tan to reddish brown, hard and round sclerotia are embedded in the mycelia. | |
Conditions for Disease Development: | |
The fungus infects many crops, including solanaceous, cucurbits, legumes and onions. | |
The pathogen produces sclerotia, which can survive in the soil for long periods when soil moisture is low. | |
Periods of hot, humid weather favor disease development. | |
Infection can either be direct or through wounds created by nematodes or insects. | |
Germinating sclerotia may also infect fruit, leaves and branches that touch the soil. | |
The fungus is spread into a field by infested soil or cultivating tools, infected transplants, running water, and as sclerotia mixed with seeds. | |
Management and Control: | |
Avoid dense planting and choose fields which are well-drained and not too acidic.
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Bury crop debris to a depth of 24 cm to suppress germination of sclerotia. | |
Application of ammonium nitrate before planting or as side dress can help reduce incidence. | |
In new or unaffected areas, crop rotation with non-hosts like corn maybe effective in reducing inoculum in the soil. | |
Protect seedlings by drenching with chemical fungicides like mancozeb (e.g. Attain M-80Ⓡ, Achem Mancozeb 80 WPⓇ, Micron 80 WOⓇ, VanzebⓇ) or carbendazim (Bavistin 50 DFⓇ, Goldazim 500 SSⓇ, Minx 500 SCⓇ, SuperdazimⓇ, Avert 50 WPⓇ, BiostinⓇ). |
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